A True History of the United States
By Daniel A. Sjursen
By Daniel A. Sjursen
By Daniel A. Sjursen
By Daniel A. Sjursen
Part of Truth to Power
Part of Truth to Power
Category: U.S. History | Domestic Politics
Category: U.S. History | Domestic Politics
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$19.95
Jun 01, 2021 | ISBN 9781586422530
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Jun 01, 2021 | ISBN 9781586422547
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Praise
“An engaging warts-and-all history of the U.S. meant to better educate those who fight for it…Strongly written and thought-provoking—a must read for nonhistorians seeking a firm grasp of accurate American history.”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Sjursen’s analysis compels the reader to think critically, in order to move beyond the half-truths that keep us from collectively solving America’s most persistent and damaging inequities.”
—Seattle Book Review
“Eye-opening and thought-provoking . . . for anyone wanting a solid and more complete understanding of our shared history, this is a great book to have.”
—Lily Bartels of The Open Door Bookstore on Northeast Public Radio
“Author Sjursen’s strong-worded narrative of American history makes a credible effort to close “the gap between what scholars know and what students learn” and writes in a way that non-historians will appreciate.”
—FrontLine Magazine
“Sjursen knows how to inform, provoke, and inspire. Even better, he knows how to be equal parts tough-minded and openminded. A True History is for anyone wishing to be pushed beyond their comfort zone in the service of forming a more perfect union in America.”
—William J. Astore, historian, retired lieutenant colonel (USAF), author of Hindenburg: Icon of German Militarism
“Every history teacher, from middle school, high school, to university, will want to grab this brilliant book, a U.S. History study guide like no other. Based on the course he taught at West Point, historian and Army combat veteran Daniel Sjursen offers profound insights and challenges the standard U.S. History narrative.”
—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States
“Sjursen exposes the dominant historical narrative as at best myth, and at times a lie. Popular history celebrates the power of the ruling elites in the present by deifying the ruling elites of the past. Sjursen relentlessly puts back into the historical record the racism, injustices, lies and crimes lesser historians ignore or whitewash. He exposes the complexity of problematic historical figures, such as the overt racist and imperialist Woodrow Wilson, too often transformed into a mythical social archetype whose darker actions, including a decision to re-segregate the federal government and repeated military interventions on behalf of American corporations in Latin America, destroyed tens of thousands of lives . . . Sjursen brings out from the shadows those who struggled, often at the cost of their own lives, for equality and justice. Their stories, so often ignored or trivialized, give us examples of who we should emulate and who we must become. ”
—Chris Hedges, author of Empire of Illusion and America: The Farewell Tour
“Nobody fuses together two time-honored cliches: ‘those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it’ and the West Point Academy motto of ‘Duty, Honor and Country’ better than retired Army Major Daniel Sjursen.”
—Coleen Rowley, FBI Special Agent (ret.), 9/11and Iraq War whistleblower, and TIME Person of the Year (2022)
“Major Danny Sjursen (Ret.) is the ultimate soldier/scholar who after 18 years fighting America’s futile end-of-empire wars has written the definitive history of our imperial entanglements dating back to the pre-colonial era. His writing is an indispensable companion to Howard Zinn’s classic unmasking of the perpetual fraud of American innocence.”
—Robert Scheer, author of How the United States Got Involved in Vietnam, journalist, and co-founder and editor of Truthdig.com
“To understand reality, there are two things that matter: 1) facts; and 2) the interpretation of those facts. Sjursen can masterfully wield both . . . an encouraging reminder that if America truly seeks to live the ideals it was founded on, there is still much more work to do.”
—Erik Edstrom, West Point graduate, Afghan War veteran, and author of Un-American: A Soldier’s Reckoning of Our Longest War
“General Ulysses S. Grant felt the U.S. war with Mexico, 1846-1848, was wrong. In the judgment of real historians like Sjursen, Grant was right. In A True History of the United States, Sjursen explains why such historical candor and accuracy is critical by giving us the reason he taught West Pointers not only that Grant was right in his assessment of our war of aggression and aggrandizement in Mexico, but why historical truth in general is a necessary antidote to the hypocrisy of patriotic nationalism: ‘Exposure to the historical myths and flaws…of the country they might very well die for seemed appropriate. Anything less would have felt obscene.’ Read this book to discover why.”
—Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, US Army (retired), former chief of staff to the secretary of state, professor of government and public policy at the College of William and Mary
Table Of Contents
Preface
1. Original Sin — American Slavery, American Freedom
2. Roots in Religious Zealotry
3. Whose Empire?
4. Patriots or Insurgents?
5. Independence and Civil War (Part One)
6. Whose Revolution? (Part Two)
7. Flowering or Excess of Democracy
8. Counter-Revolution of 1787? — New Constitution, New Nation
9. George Washington’s Turbulent Administration
10. Liberty Versus Order
11. The Jeffersonian Enigma
12. The Forgotten and Peculiar War of 1812
13. Birth of an Era of Revolutions
14. Andrew Jackson’s White Male World and the Start of Modern Politics
15. The Fraudulent Mexican-American War
16. A Broken Union
17. The Second American Civil War — The Slow, Perilous Shift to Emancipation
18. Reconstruction, a Failed Experiment?
19. Lies We Tell Ourselves About the Old West
20. Wealth and Squalor in the Progressive Era
21. The Tragic Dawn of Overseas Imperialism
22. A Savage War to End All Wars, and a Failed Peace
23. The Decade That Roared and Wept
24. FDR and His Deal for a Desperate Time
25. From Isolationism to a Second World Conflagration
26. Just How Good Was the “Good War”?
27. A Cruel, Costly, and Anxious Cold War
28. JFK’s Cold War Chains
29. Vietnam, an American Tragedy
30. Civil Rights, a Dream Deferred
31. Nixon’s Dark Legacy
32. Carter’s Cage of Crisis
33. The Reagan Revolution
34. Bush the Elder — Struggling in Reagan’s Shadow
35. Bill Clinton, the New Democrat
36. Bush II and the Birth of Forever War
37. The Obama Disappointment
Epilogue: A Once, Always, and Future Empire
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